"We just can't grasp what we were hearing."

Update: Lily Groesbeck, the toddler who survived a car wreck that resulted in her hanging upside down for 14 hours while the car was partly submerged in freezing waters, has made an incredible recovery.

Deven Trafny, Lily's father, has spoken for the first time since the accident that tragically killed Jenny Groesbeck, his fiancé and Lily's mother. "I'm counting all my blessings right now," he told KUTV. Deven is overjoyed about his daughter's survival, but he's also mourning the loss of Jenny. "That's kind of a hard situation for me right now. I haven't really wrapped my head around that. She was the love of my life and I'm going to miss her a lot. I still have to deal with that."

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Deven posted a video of Lily, giving everyone some reassurance that she's happy and healthy (despite being away from home and very sleepy in the video), and that she bounced back to her normal self.

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When everyone learned about the miraculous rescue that saved the life of an 18-month-old girl after a car accident in Utah, people were in awe that the little girl survived the crash. Her mother, Lynn Groesbeck, tragically died on impact after her car plummeted into a frozen river. 14 hours later, the vehicle that was turned upside down and partially submerged in the frigid water was luckily discovered by a fisherman.

Since original reports of the story, four of the police officers involved in the rescue have shared a haunting detail about the crash that even they haven't come to terms with: All four police officers say they heard a mysterious voice calling for help from within the car.

"We've gotten together and just talk about it and all four of us can swear that we heard somebody inside the car saying, 'Help,'" Officer Jared Warner, one of the first policemen to arrive at the scene, told Deseret News. Once the officers flipped the car over, the only people in the car were the deceased mother and her toddler, Lily, who was unconscious.

"It wasn't just something that was just in our heads. To me it was plain as day cause I remember hearing a voice," said Officer Tyler Beddoes. "I think it was [Officer Tyler Dewitt] who said, 'We're trying. We're trying our best to get in there.' How do you explain that? I don't know."